The Drug War has begun: USA fighting Canada
U.S. fears drug spillover from Canada
Border seizures soar
Jan Cienski and Carl Hanlon
National Post, Global Television
WASHINGTON - A dramatic increase in drug seizures along the U.S.-Canadian border, coupled with an increasingly tolerant attitude in Canada toward
narcotics, is fuelling U.S. concerns that Canada is becoming a source of drug
problems for the United States.
If Canada does not halt what Washington perceives as a slide toward the
legalization of drugs and act more vigorously to stamp out drug smuggling, the
United States is prepared to retaliate by using the stick of tougher customs
regulation, something which could have disastrous effects on Canada's
U.S.-dependent economy.
"Canada is a sovereign country, but there are consequences when neighbours
cannot co-operate on serious issues and this is a very serious issue," said
Robert Maginnis, an advisor to White House drug czar John Walters. "It appears
as if it's a trend going in the wrong direction and it is incumbent on the U.S.
administration and the U.S. Congress to communicate that this is a key
concern."
In recent years, U.S. authorities have been intercepting growing amounts of
drugs being smuggled south from Canada, particularly the potent form of
marijuana cultivated in British Columbia hydroponic grow houses known as B.C.
bud.
But after border controls were tightened following the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, drug seizures skyrocketed. Two years ago, the Americans seized 2,648
kilograms of marijuana coming in from British Columbia. In 2001 that figure
jumped to over 3,400 kilograms. So far this year U.S. Customs has confiscated
3,100 kilograms and expects to hit 7,300 kilograms by the end of the year.
In Buffalo, N.Y., U.S. Customs has seized 350 kilograms of B.C. bud this year,
three times more than last year, said Mark MacVittie, a chief inspector there.
U.S. officials attribute part of the increase to tighter border security
following the Sept. 11 attacks and part to the criminal gangs which are taking
over the trade and shipping drugs to the United States in larger amounts.
Corporal Scott Rintoul of the RCMP estimated that 70% of the marijuana grown in
Canada ends up in the United States.
The potent B.C. bud, which has a THC content as high as 25%, compared to the 2%
typical in the 1970s, is also leading to health concerns in the United States.
THC is the active ingredient in marijuana.
Admissions for marijuana drug treatment in Washington state now exceed the rate
for treatment of alcoholism. Cannabis admissions in Cook County, Ill., have
risen by 400% in the last four years.
That is causing increasing anger south of the border. "One of the areas of
growth has actually been through Canada," Mr. Walters told Congress recently
when testifying about the U.S. drug problem.
The United States is also worried that Canada could turn into a North American
version of the Netherlands, attracting pot-seeking tourists and leading to
pressure in surrounding countries to ease their drug laws in turn.
A recent report from the Canadian Senate that drug control was not working
raised alarms in Washington, which fears it heralds a move toward legalization.
Mr. Maginnis and other administration officials are already lobbying the
Canadian government to go no further on the path toward legalization. They
intend to make their case at a drug policy conference next month in Quebec,
where Mr. Walters is expected to make a strong argument against legalization.
The U.S. government has already helped delay Canada's medical marijuana program
by refusing to supply standardized marijuana seeds from a U.S. government
marijuana farm in Mississippi.
Although several states have approved medical marijuana, the federal government
has blocked any attempt to find legitimate uses for the drug.
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